>INTRODUCTION There are a good number of studies of the 1976 Pacific Climate Shift. Many of them discuss the processes that initiated the shift as modeled in GCMs; others illustrate the resulting effects on climate in the North Pacific and … Continue reading →

>The third version of the Extended Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature (ERSST.v3) is available in ASCII format in a number of data sets segmented by latitude. The data spans the period of January 1880 to April 2008. It has not been … Continue reading →

>No. The Armagh Observatory in Northern Ireland has monitored and recorded the number of storms with gale winds since 1796, with a short period in the early 1800s (1825 to 1833) during which data is not available or incomplete. The … Continue reading →

>CORRECTION In the opening paragraph of this post, I make the following statement: “The newsworthy item this month is the change in the direction of the NINO3.4 SST anomaly data. It’s a minor drop, but it has dropped. IF, big … Continue reading →

>INTRODUCTION Every now and then I’ll find some phrase or comparison in a blog post or comment or a climate research paper that initiates a new search for a correlation or causal relationship between solar irradiance and ENSO. While I … Continue reading →

>INTRODUCTION A number of blogs, including IceCap, have picked up the Reuters story about the anomalous SSTs off the Peruvian Coast. The article “Peru studies climate riddle as the world heats up” begins with: “Scientists are using everything from a … Continue reading →

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NOTES ON GRAPHS

If you use one of my graphs or other illustrations, please provide a link to the post where it was found.

Also, please advise me via a comment if an illustration does not appear in a post. The image hosting site loses them occasionally. I have the illustrations on file and should be able to replace/repair them. Thanks.